> I think I'm still missing some basic data here (probably because this > thread did not originate on netdev). Let me try to nail down some of > the basics. You have a linux ia64 box (running 2.6.12 or 2.6.18?) that > sends slowly, and receives faster, but not quite a 1 Gbps? And this is > true regardless of which peer it sends or receives from? And the > behavior is different depending on which kernel? How, and which kernel > versions? Do you have other hardware running the same kernel that > behaves the same or differently?
just got off the phone with Linus and he thinks it is the side that does the accept is the problem side, i.e., if you are the server, you do the accept, and you send the data, you'll go slow. But as I'm writing this I realize he's wrong, because it is the combination of accept & send. accept & recv goes fast. A trivial way to see the problem is to take two linux boxes, on each apt-get install rsh-client rsh-server set up your .rhosts, and then do dd if=/dev/zero count=100000 | rsh OTHER_BOX dd of=/dev/null rsh OTHER_BOX dd if=/dev/zero count=100000 | dd of=/dev/null See if you get balanced results. For me, I get 45MB/sec one way, and 15-19MB/sec the other way. I've tried the same test linux - linux and linux - hpux. Same results. The test setup I have is work: 2ghz x 2 Athlons, e1000, 2.6.18 ia64: 900mhz Itanium, e1000, 2.6.12 hp-ia64:900mhz Itanium, e1000, hpux 11 glibc*: 1-2ghz athlons running various linux releases all connected through a netgear 724T 10/100/1000 switch (a linksys showed identical results). I tested work <-> hp-ia64 work <-> ia64 ia64 <-> hp-ia64 and in all cases, one direction worked fast and the other didn't. It would be good if people tried the same simple test. You have to use rsh, ssh will slow things down way too much. Alternatively, take your favorite test programs, such as John's, and make a second pair that reverses the direction the data is sent. So one pair is server sends, the other is server receives, try both. That's where we started, BitKeeper, my stripped down test, and John's test all exhibit the same behavior. And the rsh test is just a really simple way to demonstrate it. Wayne, Linus asked for tcp dumps from just one side, with the first 100 packets and then wait 10 seconds or so for the window to open up, and then a snap shot of the another 100 packets. Do that for both directions and send them to the list. Can you do that? I want to get lunch, I'm starving. -- --- Larry McVoy lm at bitmover.com http://www.bitkeeper.com - To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe netdev" in the body of a message to [EMAIL PROTECTED] More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html